Monday, November 5, 2012

NY Times Blogger Weighs in On Merchants' Side in "The Big Swipe"

University of Massachusetts economics professor and New York Times Economix blogger Nancy Folbre weighs in on the swipe fee debate, stating that "basic economic principles" side with the merchants' arguments that swipe fees on debit and credit cards are unfair and too high. She writes:
"Basic economic principles strengthen their case. Banks that are “too big to fail” are also big enough to bully smaller businesses. Since the early 1970s, the five largest banking institutions in the United States have tripled their share of financial assets from 17 percent to 52 percent. The retail sector is more diverse and more competitive: In the first quarter of 2012, the median profit margin was 7 percent for discretionary consumer goods and 8 percent for consumer staples, compared to almost 16 percent for financials.   
"The credit card industry is even more concentrated than banking. In 2010 Visa and MasterCard alone accounted for 82 percent of all credit receivables outstanding. For many years they made it difficult for merchants to offer a cash discount, or better terms to customers with less expensive cards. Left with no practical option other than declining to accept credit cards altogether, which would hurt their sales, merchants had little choice but to pay ever-higher swipe fees." 

 Read more of her blog, The Big Swipe.

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